Vital Force

Vital Force by Trevor Scott Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Vital Force by Trevor Scott Read Free Book Online
Authors: Trevor Scott
off the gate and ricocheted into the night.
    Instinctively, Jake went for his gun, which wasn’t there.

8
    They ran. Then they split up and ran some more. Finding himself in unfamiliar city streets, Jake finally found a cab and told the driver to take him to the China Theatre on the western edge of Beijing near the zoo.
    As the cab drove off, Jake checked behind them. Nothing. Maybe the shooter had followed Armstrong.
    When the cab reached the China Theatre, Jake paid the cab driver and then located the bus stop across the street. He spent the next hour transferring from bus to bus on his way back to his hotel.
    Jake spent the rest of the night holed up in his hotel trying to figure out how he had gotten himself into another mess like this. Trouble seemed to follow him around, as if someone had placed a GPS tracking device at the base of his skull.
    â—
    The Agency officer, Brian Armstrong, had said to meet him at ten the next morning in the center of Tiananmen Square. Jake was now, ten minutes past the hour, standing against a far edge watching the most likely entrance to the expansive square, the side directly across the street from the Gate of Heavenly Peace with the ten-foot photo of Chairman Mao looming down on visitors. At this hour, the large tour groups moved about the stone surface like schools of fish. Food vendors with little carts hoped to attract the early lunch crowd, while others wandered about trying to hawk packs of postcards under the watchful eyes of barely-pubescent underfed soldiers in green uniforms. Jake guessed the place was a zoo in July, but the tourist season in China’s February was limited.
    Glancing up at posts strategically located about the square, Jake noticed cameras swiveling about on top of each. Then a small truck moved slowly about the large stone surface, with cameras also working overtime. There would be no repeat of 1989, Jake thought. He imagined the blood from that massacre still settled among the mortar.
    With all of the activity, it was possible for the Agency man to slip in without Jake’s knowledge. And, considering he had only seen the man for a brief moment prior to the bullets flying and their departure in different directions, Jake wasn’t a hundred percent sure if he could pick him out in the large mass of humanity. The only advantage he had was the fact that most of the American tourists were in groups, and Armstrong was a six foot, blond Anglo among a sea of shorter Asians.
    Finally, Jake saw the man step out of a bus at the Tiananmen Gate and hurry across the large expanse to where the center could be located. There was no actual center or obvious center. When Armstrong got to a point in the square, he looked straight ahead for a moment before slowly swiveling his head and eyes in each direction. He couldn’t have been more obvious.
    Jake shook his head and started toward the man. He had wanted to wait for a while to see if Armstrong had been followed. He had to think that nearly every employee of the U.S. government working out of the embassy had at least one shadow. Yet, in this situation, Jake felt it best to simply move forward and see what the man had on his mind.
    Something wasn’t right, Jake could tell. But he stepped forward and pulled out a large map of Beijing just before he reached Armstrong.
    â€œDo you know where in the hell I can find someone with brains?” Jake asked the man, pointing to a place on his map.
    â€œYou’re a funny bastard, you know that?” Armstrong pointed to a place on the map. “Over my left shoulder, about fifty yards back, you’ll see a man with a camera. That’s Number One Son. One of three tails I get every day. That’s why I need you.” He smiled and pointed toward the Forbidden City.
    â€œSo then why did you bring me here to be photographed?” Jake said, marking another point on the map with his finger. “There are more cameras in this square than all of

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